Title: The Linear Collider Alignment and Survey LiCAS Project
1The Linear Collider Alignment and Survey (LiCAS)
Project
- Richard Bingham, Edward Botcherby, Paul Coe, John
Green, - Grzegorz Grzelak, Ankush Mitra, John Nixon, Armin
Reichold - University of Oxford
- Andreas Herty, Wolfgang Liebl, Johannes Prenting
- Applied Geodesy Group, DESY
2Contents
- Introduction
- LiCAS Phase I
- Frequency Scanning Interferometry (FSI)
- Straightness Monitors (SM)
- LiCAS Phase II Final Focus Stabilisation
- Summary
3Requirements for a Linear Collider
- To study interesting physics, LC must be
- High Energy to create massive particles
- High Luminosity to create large numbers of
particles - LC must have
- Large accelerating gradients
- VERY small beam cross-sections at IP O(nm)
4Proposed Linear Collider TESLA
X-FEL
- Collider Length 33km
- Beam Energy 500 GeV
- Beam Luminosity 1034 cm-2 s-1
- Beam Alignment at IP O(nm)
- Collider Alignment Survey
200mm over 600m
5 Why is this hard ?
200mm over 600m
- Temperature pressure gradients inside collider
tunnel affect open-air measurements - Ground motion will misalign collider so survey
must be quick - These precludes conventional open-air surveying
techniques
Light gets bent by air refraction
T
6Survey Procedure
- Two-step Survey procedure
- Survey regularly spaced tunnel wall markers via
multiple overlapping measurements LiCAS Job - Measure collider components against wall makers
- Can be done manually with simple instrument
- Advantage
- The same procedure is employed during tunnel
construction, collider installation, operation
and maintenance
7Survey Implementation
Tunnel Wall
Reconstructed tunnel shapes (relative
co-ordinates)
8 Survey Train LiCAS Systems
- An Optical metrology system for survey of a
linear Collider - Fast, automated high precision system
- Can operate in tight spaces
9First Survey Train Carriage
- This carriage forms the mechanical body to hold
the LiCAS sensors (FSISM). - The carriage is able to move the sensors into
position
10Frequency Scanning Interferometry
- Interferometric length measurement technique
- Require precision of 1mm over 5m
- Originally developed for online alignment of the
ATLAS SCT tracker
Tunable Laser
Reference Interferometer L
Measurement Interferometer D
(Grid Line Interferometer (GLI))
Change of phase DFGLI
11FSI Interferometer
Glass BeamSplitter
Tunable Laser
Fibre
Collimator
Retroreflector
Photodiode
Quill
Fibre Splitter
- Common path optical-fibre based interferometer
- Optical fibre allows remote delivery and
measurement - Allows interferometer heads to be small compact
12FSI Implementation
½ Sphere mounted retroreflector
Fibre Collimator
13FSI Results
- A retroreflector was moved perpendicular to FSI
measurement interferometer - Error on each measurement is 4mm
- Good for first attempt but still need to achieve
1mm
14Straightness Monitors
- Used to measure carriage transverse translations
and rotations - Require 1mm precision over length of train
Rotation Spots move opposite directions
Translation Spots move same direction
CCD Camera
15SM Apparatus
Retroreflector
Beam Splitter
Linear Stage
Rotation Stage
16SM Results Linear Translation
CCD 1
The beam spots move in the same direction for
translation
CCD 0
17SM Rotation
CCD 1
The beam spots move in the opposite directions
for rotation
CCD 0
18Simulations of Train over 600m
Error on positions lt 200mm after 600m
19End of LiCAS Phase I ..Onto LiCAS Phase II
20LiCAS Phase II Final Focus Stabilisation
- Final Focus magnets of LC need to be stabilised
to nanometres - FSI can provide micron resolution absolute
measurements. - Interferometer fed with light from a tunable
laser - Michelson interferometry gives differential
nanometre resolution - Add fixed frequency laser to interferometer
- Combine to get best of both techniques
Tunable Laser
Photodiode
21LiCAS Final Focus Stabilisation
Final Focus Magnets
e
Detector
Machine Components
- M-FSI can measure absolute and relative lengths
- Position is not dependent on beam
- Light fed by fibres
- No complex geometry for light path
- Can follow same route as DAQ cables out of
detector - Grid can measure all degrees of freedom
22Summary
- Future linear colliders require precision survey
and alignment - The LiCAS group is developing optical metrology
techniques to address this in collaboration with
DESY - General collider alignment survey is a good
test-bed for LiCAS technology - Plans to extend LiCAS technology for Final Focus
stabilisation
23(No Transcript)
24Final Focus Stabilisation Optical Anchor
- Use Michelson interferometers to monitor nm
movement of magnets - Complex geometry for light path
- Not all degrees of freedom can be measured
- Can only make relative measurements
- Position data lost when beam is lost
Optical Anchor
Final Focus Magnets
e
Detector
Optical Anchor
25 Survey Train External Measurements
- Each carriage measures the position of a
reference marker in its own co-ordinates - Q How to tie reference marker co-ordinates
together
Marker 1 at (x1,y1)
Marker 2 at (x2,y2)
1D FSI Length Measurements
Carriage 2
Carriage 1
26 Survey Train Internal Measurements
- Use internal system to relative positions of
carriages - Internal systems ties the external measurements
together
Marker 1 at (x1,y1)
Marker 2 at (x2,y2)
1D FSI Length Measurements
SM Measurements
Carriage 1
Carriage 2 (xc2,yc2)
27FSI ATLAS Implementation
28FSI ATLAS Test Grid
- 6 simultaneous length measurements made between
four corners of the square. - 7th interferometer to measure stage position.
- Displacements of one corner of the square can
then be reconstructed.
29FSI ATLAS Resolution
30FSI ATLAS Resolution
- Stage is kept stationary
- RMS 3D Scatter
- lt 1 mm
31FSI Installation
- Installation of first components of ATLAS FSI
system into first carbon fibre barrel. - Just completed on Tuesday (19/08/2003)
32 Reference Interferometer Phase Extraction
- Reference Interferometer is FSIs yard-stick
- Must measure interferometer phase precisely
- Uses standard technique of Phase-Stepping
Step1 I(ftrue-1.5Df) Step2 I(ftrue-0.5Df) Step3
I(ftrue0.5Df) Step4 I(ftrue1.5Df)
Reference Interferometer mirror moved in 4 equal
sized steps
ftrue
33Two Laser AM Demodulation
- Need 2 lasers for drift cancellation
- Have both lasers present use AM demodulation to
electronically separate signals
M1
t0
t1
M2
Laser 1
Laser 2
Detector
t0
t1
34Two Laser AM Demodulation
- Amplitude Modulation on FSI fringe
- _at_ 40 80 kHz (now) 0.5 1MHz (later)
- FSI fringe stored as amplitude on
- Carrier (à la AM radio)
- Demodulation reproduces FSI Fringes
35Results of Demodulation
Both signals have same frequency !!
Demodulation of modulated laser does not effect
interferometer signal
36Getting FSI to nanometres
Tunable Laser
Photodiode
- FSI can provide micron resolution absolute
measurements. - Interferometer fed with light from a tunable
laser - Michelson interferometry gives differential
nanometre resolution - Add fixed frequency laser to interferometer
- Combine to get best of both techniques